I have mixed opinions about that crash video.
First one is that while he did act to immobilize the youth and direct the other person to block and close the jump - which is great, exactly what I was taught in WFA, protect scene safety first, second activate spinal precautions in a high mechanism of injury that could have involved spinal injury - I’m not sure if immediate helmet removal was warranted and I’m curious what any WFR/W-EMT instructors have to say about this. The youth was talking, so airway and breathing are no longer a concern. If you are going to go through the trouble of immobilizing the patient, I would think trying to remove the helmet by yourself could pose an increased risk of exacerbating a potential spinal injury without improving the odds of clearing any circulatory/bleeding issues? I was trained that Circulatory takes priority over disability, but I’m just not sure if removing the helmet is necessary to do so? Again, paging the W-EMT/WFR crowd here??? My thinking is if you are concerned enough to immobilize the subject then you call for resort first aid and wait for them to clear the subject while you look for any signs of bleeding, and keep the kid talking.
Regarding the crash, I have mixed opinions as well, in that I agree that the GoPro makes it obvious that there was a second kid, but maybe when zooming along it’s not obvious and the guy knows not to brake check if he has already avoided the first kid. I could go either way on that call to not brake check and just go around the first kid.
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